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US4244061A - Urinals - Google Patents

Urinals Download PDF

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Publication number
US4244061A
US4244061A US05/942,196 US94219678A US4244061A US 4244061 A US4244061 A US 4244061A US 94219678 A US94219678 A US 94219678A US 4244061 A US4244061 A US 4244061A
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US
United States
Prior art keywords
trap
urinal
liquid
inlet
pipe means
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US05/942,196
Inventor
Cyril J. D. Webster
John C. Griggs
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National Research Development Corp UK
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National Research Development Corp UK
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
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Publication date
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Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E03WATER SUPPLY; SEWERAGE
    • E03DWATER-CLOSETS OR URINALS WITH FLUSHING DEVICES; FLUSHING VALVES THEREFOR
    • E03D13/00Urinals ; Means for connecting the urinal to the flushing pipe and the wastepipe; Splashing shields for urinals
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S4/00Baths, closets, sinks, and spittoons
    • Y10S4/14Pipe strainers
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T137/00Fluid handling
    • Y10T137/4456With liquid valves or liquid trap seals

Definitions

  • This invention relates to urinals.
  • Urinals are conventionally provided with a source of flushing water operated from time-to-time to flush out the urinal trap into a connected water-borne sewage system. Such a flushing arrangement is often a requirement of building or public health regulations. Moreover the need to provide a supply of water and the mechanism to flush the urinal increases the cost and size of the installation particularly in places where transport of raw materials is expensive and a regular supply of water expensive or unobtainable.
  • the arrangement does not require a source of flushing water it does require regular attention, say every six months, to replace the oil seal which is reduced a little at each use.
  • the oil can be displaced entirely if, for example, a bucket of liquid is emptied through the trap, the sudden surge washing away the oil.
  • the form of the trap prevents it being installed in a conventional urinal bowl or stall.
  • a urinal is provided with a trap of dimensions such as to encourage plug flow of liquid through the trap.
  • lug flow in this context and throughout the specification is meant a flow in which new liquid entering the trap will displace liquid already present there without significant mixing occurring in the trap.
  • Tests indicate that plug flow will occur if the internal diameter of the trap cross-section lies in the range 8 mm to 25 mm values of around 10-15 mm and more specifically about 12 mm being currently preferred.
  • the maximum amount of liquid that can be held in the trap should not exceed 0.1 liters.
  • the invention comprises a urinal provided with a trap of dimensions such as to encourage plug flow of liquid through the trap and without any source of flushing water present in or associated with the urinal.
  • a urinal trap including an entry portion, a bend portion to contain liquid as a sealing trap and an exit, tail, portion, the entry portion forming at least part of a urinal waste connection and the bend portion having a bore of not more than 25 mm to restrict the trapped liquid volume to not more than 0.1 liters while maintaining, in use, a trap seal on the flow of new liquid into the entry portion to displace retained liquid from the trap seal for exit through the tail portion without significant mixing of new and displaced retained liquid occurring.
  • a urinal trap as described above may be fitted to a urinal bowl for use without the provision of a supply of flushing water.
  • the trap may be fitted to a conventional waste by the sealing engagement of a director of the trap to the waste and the placing of a removable filter in the trap entry.
  • the filter may be a wall portion supporting at the bottom of the wall a lower layer of an array of horizontal perforated plastics material and an upper layer of perforated plastics material curved upwardly to a dome shape, the wall portion fitting into the waste entry.
  • a urinal bowl 10 is provided with a conventional plastic waste 12 (e.g. of polyethylene) fitted with a plug-flow trap 14 formed from 12 mm inside diameter reinforced plastics pipe (e.g. of p.v.c.).
  • a mass of plasticine (R.T.M.) 15 is used to provide a seal between the bowl 10 and the waste 12.
  • the bowl 10 is "waterless" i.e. no source of flushing water is intended or provided.
  • a support 16 is secured to bowl 10 by a back-nut 18.
  • the support 16 supports the top bend of trap 14 which at its free end is secured to a director 20 by a clip 22.
  • a watertight seal is provided by two O-rings 24, 26.
  • the trap is connected by a T-junction 28 to a conventional waste pipe 30 (not to scale).
  • the height of the director 20 is adjusted so that the level of urine 32 trapped in the trap is not above the opening 34 in the director. In this way the surface area of exposed urine is kept small without restricting the free flow of liquid through the trap.
  • the depth of the liquid in the trap should be sufficient to prevent seal loss due to pressure variations in the waste pipe 30. Typically, in the United Kingdom for example, a trap depth of some 50 mm should be sufficient for this purpose.
  • the arrangement may be completed by a removable filter 36 having an upwardly domed mesh base 38 and an upstanding wall portion 40.
  • the upstanding wall portion helps to trap debris for subsequent removal.
  • the illustrated filter 36 is replaced by a double grid version comprising an array of horizontal perforated plastic strips in roughly the same plane as the bottom edge of a wall portion corresponding to wall portion 40 and a second array of perforated plastic strips at right angles to those of the first array and curved to give a similar domed profile to that of the illustrated base 38.
  • the perforations are sized to permit easy entry of liquid without obstructing the escape of displaced air. Typically perforations of about 2 to 3 mm are suitable.
  • the P-trap form is modified to the S-trap form by arranging for the horizontal tail to extend for a length of at least 75 mm before dipping down, e.g. through a right angle, to a waste pipe at a level lower than pipe 30 and, if required, below the level of the trap.
  • a lower level is indicated at 42 by the broken-line cross-sectional view of the waste pipe.
  • the minimum horizontal length of 75 mm ensures that self-syphonage of the trap does not occur.
  • the trap is shown with an adjustable director 20 for the reason mentioned above.
  • the adjustable director also facilitates the installation of a "run" of urinal bowls as the fall of the waste pipe 30 (or 42) is easily accommodated by adjusting the position of director 20. This adjustment also facilitates the fitting of the trap to existing bowls in place of conventional traps.
  • the director need not be adjustable and the use of a conventional waste is not essential, the director could be formed to fit to the conventional bowl outlet aperture. Provision for a filter such as 36 is generally desirable in all cases however.
  • a plastics material is preferred for the parts exposed to or submerged in urine as it has been found that the metals commonly used in plumbing, i.e. zinc, brass, lead, copper, chromium plate etc., all corrode rapidly in such use.
  • metals with suitable plastics or other coatings may be usable and the invention is not restricted to embodiments wholly of plastics material. Glass is another possible material.

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  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Hydrology & Water Resources (AREA)
  • Public Health (AREA)
  • Water Supply & Treatment (AREA)
  • Sanitary Device For Flush Toilet (AREA)

Abstract

A urinal arrangement for flushless hygienic operation has a sealing trap with a bend portion having a bore of not more than 25 mm. The bore size produces "plug flow" through the trap so that liquid retained in the trap as a seal is displaced in use by new liquid without significant mixing of new and displaced liquid. The small bore reduces the exposed surface area of the retained liquid forming the seal.

Description

This invention relates to urinals.
Urinals are conventionally provided with a source of flushing water operated from time-to-time to flush out the urinal trap into a connected water-borne sewage system. Such a flushing arrangement is often a requirement of building or public health regulations. Moreover the need to provide a supply of water and the mechanism to flush the urinal increases the cost and size of the installation particularly in places where transport of raw materials is expensive and a regular supply of water expensive or unobtainable.
Attempts have therefore been made to produce a urinal which does not require a source of flushing water for effective operation. One arrangement which has been accepted by some authorities is the System Ernst. This is an old-established arrangement described in United Kingdom Agrement Board Certificate 69/34 published 1969. This arrangement is a special urinal stall which uses a multipart cylindrical cast-iron trap defining three concentric volumes fitted to an in situ cement bowl. The trap is initially provided with a quantity of a proprietary mineral oil which forms a seal of a layer some 13 mm thick floating on urine retained in the trap. The total trap depth is some 70 mm. The volume of oil required initially for the 13 mm seal is about 0.04 liter as a ring in the outermost concentric volume. The total trapped liquid volume is some 0.3 liter. Although the arrangement does not require a source of flushing water it does require regular attention, say every six months, to replace the oil seal which is reduced a little at each use. Also the oil can be displaced entirely if, for example, a bucket of liquid is emptied through the trap, the sudden surge washing away the oil. Furthermore the form of the trap prevents it being installed in a conventional urinal bowl or stall.
There is therefore a need for a urinal arrangement including a trap which does not require flushing to remain hygienic, does not require regular attention and can withstand a sudden surge of liquid.
It is an object of the invention to provide a urinal which can be hygienically operated without a source of flushing water.
According to the present invention, a urinal is provided with a trap of dimensions such as to encourage plug flow of liquid through the trap.
By "plug flow" in this context and throughout the specification is meant a flow in which new liquid entering the trap will displace liquid already present there without significant mixing occurring in the trap.
Traps having the above characteristics will hereinafter be referred to as "plug-flow" traps.
Tests indicate that plug flow will occur if the internal diameter of the trap cross-section lies in the range 8 mm to 25 mm values of around 10-15 mm and more specifically about 12 mm being currently preferred.
Preferably also the maximum amount of liquid that can be held in the trap should not exceed 0.1 liters.
An advantage of using plug flow traps is that water flushing of the urinal is no longer necessary because the urine in the trap during normal use will be fresh and therefore without unpleasant odour. Thus in a preferred form, the invention comprises a urinal provided with a trap of dimensions such as to encourage plug flow of liquid through the trap and without any source of flushing water present in or associated with the urinal.
According to a particular aspect of the invention there is provided a urinal trap including an entry portion, a bend portion to contain liquid as a sealing trap and an exit, tail, portion, the entry portion forming at least part of a urinal waste connection and the bend portion having a bore of not more than 25 mm to restrict the trapped liquid volume to not more than 0.1 liters while maintaining, in use, a trap seal on the flow of new liquid into the entry portion to displace retained liquid from the trap seal for exit through the tail portion without significant mixing of new and displaced retained liquid occurring.
A urinal trap as described above may be fitted to a urinal bowl for use without the provision of a supply of flushing water. The trap may be fitted to a conventional waste by the sealing engagement of a director of the trap to the waste and the placing of a removable filter in the trap entry. The filter may be a wall portion supporting at the bottom of the wall a lower layer of an array of horizontal perforated plastics material and an upper layer of perforated plastics material curved upwardly to a dome shape, the wall portion fitting into the waste entry.
An embodiment of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawing in which a urinal bowl 10 is provided with a conventional plastic waste 12 (e.g. of polyethylene) fitted with a plug-flow trap 14 formed from 12 mm inside diameter reinforced plastics pipe (e.g. of p.v.c.). A mass of plasticine (R.T.M.) 15 is used to provide a seal between the bowl 10 and the waste 12. In accordance with the preferred form of the invention, the bowl 10 is "waterless" i.e. no source of flushing water is intended or provided.
A support 16 is secured to bowl 10 by a back-nut 18. The support 16 supports the top bend of trap 14 which at its free end is secured to a director 20 by a clip 22. A watertight seal is provided by two O- rings 24, 26. At its other end the trap is connected by a T-junction 28 to a conventional waste pipe 30 (not to scale). In practice the height of the director 20 is adjusted so that the level of urine 32 trapped in the trap is not above the opening 34 in the director. In this way the surface area of exposed urine is kept small without restricting the free flow of liquid through the trap. The depth of the liquid in the trap should be sufficient to prevent seal loss due to pressure variations in the waste pipe 30. Typically, in the United Kingdom for example, a trap depth of some 50 mm should be sufficient for this purpose.
The arrangement may be completed by a removable filter 36 having an upwardly domed mesh base 38 and an upstanding wall portion 40. The upstanding wall portion helps to trap debris for subsequent removal. In an alternative embodiment (not illustrated), the illustrated filter 36 is replaced by a double grid version comprising an array of horizontal perforated plastic strips in roughly the same plane as the bottom edge of a wall portion corresponding to wall portion 40 and a second array of perforated plastic strips at right angles to those of the first array and curved to give a similar domed profile to that of the illustrated base 38. The perforations are sized to permit easy entry of liquid without obstructing the escape of displaced air. Typically perforations of about 2 to 3 mm are suitable.
In an alternative installation of the illustrated urinal the P-trap form is modified to the S-trap form by arranging for the horizontal tail to extend for a length of at least 75 mm before dipping down, e.g. through a right angle, to a waste pipe at a level lower than pipe 30 and, if required, below the level of the trap. Such a lower level is indicated at 42 by the broken-line cross-sectional view of the waste pipe. The minimum horizontal length of 75 mm ensures that self-syphonage of the trap does not occur.
The trap is shown with an adjustable director 20 for the reason mentioned above. The adjustable director also facilitates the installation of a "run" of urinal bowls as the fall of the waste pipe 30 (or 42) is easily accommodated by adjusting the position of director 20. This adjustment also facilitates the fitting of the trap to existing bowls in place of conventional traps. Clearly the director need not be adjustable and the use of a conventional waste is not essential, the director could be formed to fit to the conventional bowl outlet aperture. Provision for a filter such as 36 is generally desirable in all cases however.
A plastics material is preferred for the parts exposed to or submerged in urine as it has been found that the metals commonly used in plumbing, i.e. zinc, brass, lead, copper, chromium plate etc., all corrode rapidly in such use. However, metals with suitable plastics or other coatings may be usable and the invention is not restricted to embodiments wholly of plastics material. Glass is another possible material.

Claims (21)

We claim:
1. A urinal provided with a trap including pipe means at the inlet of said trap having a reduced cross-sectional area for limiting the surface of urine exposed to the atmosphere following use, said pipe means having an inlet and exit end for retaining a predetermined volume of liquid following each use, the reduced cross-section portion of said pipe means being dimensioned so that new liquid enters and passes through said pipe means substantially as a plug displacing at least a portion of the liquid retained in said pipe means without significant mixing between the new and retained volumes.
2. A urinal as claimed in Claim 1 in which the internal diameter of said pipe means ranges from 8 mm to 25 mm.
3. A urinal as claimed in claim 1 in which the internal diameter of said pipe means ranges from 10 mm to 15 mm.
4. A urinal as claimed in claim 1 in which the internal diameter of said pipe means is about 12 mm.
5. A urinal as claimed in claim 1 in which the maximum amount of liquid that can be held in the trap does not exceed 0.1 liters.
6. A urinal as claimed in claim 1 without any source of flushing water present in or associated with the urinal.
7. A urinal as claimed in claim 1 including a filter at the outlet to the urinal bowl, said filter having an upwardly domed mesh base surrounded by an upstanding wall portion.
8. A urinal as claimed in claim 1 including a filter at the outlet to the urinal bowl, said filter comprising a wall portion, an array of substantially horizontal perforated plastic strips in roughly the same plane as the bottom edge of the wall portion, and a second array of perforated plastic strips at right angles to those of the first array and curved to give an upwardly domed profile.
9. A urinal as claimed in claim 7 in which the filter is removable.
10. A urinal trap for use in discharging fluids and receiving new volumes of fluid to reduce unpleasant odor including an entry portion, a bend portion to contain liquid as a sealing trap and an exit, tail, portion, the entry portion having a reduced cross-sectional portion forming at least part of a urinal waste connection and the bend portion having a bore of not more than 25 mm to restrict the trapped liquid volume to not more than 0.1 liters while maintaining a trap seal on the flow of new liquid into the entry portion to displace retained liquid from the trap seal for exit through the tail portion without significant mixing of new and retained liquid volumes.
11. A urinal bowl installation fitted with a trap according to claim 10 and arranged for hygienic use without the provision of a supply of flushing water.
12. A urinal bowl installation according to claim 11 including a director sealingly engaged with the bowl waste and a removable filter in the trap entry.
13. A urinal bowl installation according to claim 11 including a removable filter of an upstanding wall portion defining an aperture, a substantially horizontal perforated plastics layer across said aperture at the bottom of the wall and a further perforated plastics layer above the horizontal layer and domed upwardly into the middle of the aperture.
14. A urinal as in claim 2 wherein said pipe means includes inlet means attached to the inlet end for providing an inlet to said pipe means, said inlet means having a diameter smaller than the diameter of said pipe means.
15. A urinal as in claim 4 wherein said pipe means includes inlet means attached to the inlet end for providing an inlet to said pipe means, said inlet means having a diameter smaller than the diameter of said pipe means.
16. A urinal as in claim 14 wherein said inlet means is slidingly secured to said pipe means.
17. A urinal as in claim 14 wherein said inlet means is comprised of an upper portion having an outer diameter larger than said pipe means and adapted to be sealingly connected to said urinal and a lower portion having an outer diameter equal to the inner diameter of said pipe means.
18. A urinal as in claim 17 wherein said inlet means is adjustably secured within said pipe means.
19. An improved trap for use with flowing liquids comprised of inlet means for establishing flow into said trap, downstream pipe means having an inlet end connected to said inlet means and an exit end, said pipe means creating together with said inlet means a plug type flow of liquid therethrough, said pipe means having an internal diameter ranging from about 8 mm to about 25 mm so that liquid entering said trap will displace liquid retained therein without any substantial mixing occurring between the new and retained liquids, wherein said inlet means includes a restricted portion having a reduced cross-sectional area smaller than the cross-sectional area of said pipe means, said restricted portion retaining a predetermined volume of liquid held by the trap so that the surface area of liquid exposed at the inlet side of said trap is reduced with respect to said pipe means.
20. In an urinal having a bowl with an outlet opening into a discharge pipe and a trap formed in the discharge pipe downstream from said outlet wherein the improvement comprises restriction means positioned at the inlet of said trap at the point where the trap establishes the surface of the waste liquid exposed to the atmosphere below said outlet for reducing the cross-sectional area of the discharge pipe and for retaining a predetermined volume of the waste liquid so that the waste liquid exposed to the atmosphere is reduced and subsequent flow from the outlet can displace the retained predetermined volume.
21. A urinal having a bowl provided with an outlet opening into a discharge pipe, a trap containing a volume of waste liquid formed in the discharge pipe downstream from the bowl outlet, said trap having a reduced cross-sectional portion positioned at the inlet of said trap and at a point substantially equal in height to the height of the liquid at the outflow end of the trap, said reduced cross-sectional area containing a reduced volume of the waste liquid within the trap to thereby reduce the surface area of the waste liquid exposed therein to the atmosphere below said bowl outlet.
US05/942,196 1978-05-12 1978-09-14 Urinals Expired - Lifetime US4244061A (en)

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Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB19224/78A GB1603579A (en) 1978-05-12 1978-05-12 Urinals
GB19224/78 1978-05-12

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Cited By (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4557274A (en) * 1982-06-07 1985-12-10 Cawood Charles David Midstream urine collector
US5331689A (en) * 1993-04-16 1994-07-26 Anwar Haq Portable urinal
US5787517A (en) * 1997-04-28 1998-08-04 Shadikhan; Tajwar Standing urinal
US6053197A (en) * 1998-09-14 2000-04-25 Gorges; Ditmar L. Horizontal-flow oil-sealant-preserving drain odor trap
US6425411B1 (en) * 1995-10-25 2002-07-30 Ditmar L. Gorges Oil sealant-preserving drain odor trap
US6467480B1 (en) * 1998-09-09 2002-10-22 Bernd Horst Meier Procedure and device for the movement and volume measurement of fluids and gases and device for the implementation of a respiration
US20030089397A1 (en) * 1995-10-25 2003-05-15 Gorges Ditmar L. Oil sealant-preserving drain odor trap
US6602464B1 (en) * 2000-04-14 2003-08-05 Gary L. Rapp Method and apparatus for treating digestible and odiferous waste
US20040034925A1 (en) * 2002-04-22 2004-02-26 Mcalpine & Company Limited Waste trap
US6701541B2 (en) * 2001-04-06 2004-03-09 Geberit Technik Ag Odor trap for a waterless urinal
US20040163171A1 (en) * 2001-03-09 2004-08-26 Hall Kelvin E. Waste outlet assembly
US20070074337A1 (en) * 2005-08-30 2007-04-05 Zurn Industries, Inc. Urinal
US20080118987A1 (en) * 2005-03-08 2008-05-22 Authentix, Inc. Microfluidic Device for Identification, Quantification, and Authentication of Latent Markers
US20080256695A1 (en) * 2006-10-13 2008-10-23 Allen James C Method and apparatus for delivering a urinal cleanser and trap sealant
EP2412879A1 (en) * 2010-07-28 2012-02-01 Andreas Bock Urinal and urinal siphon
US20120233753A1 (en) * 2011-03-16 2012-09-20 Andreas Baer Waterless Urinal Conversion Assembly
US8354069B2 (en) 2005-03-08 2013-01-15 Authentix, Inc. Plug flow system for identification and authentication of markers
US8528121B2 (en) 2011-12-14 2013-09-10 Kohler Co. Urinal bracket
US8739320B1 (en) 2013-10-02 2014-06-03 Waterless Company, Inc. Waterless urinal odor trap with helical flow-path fins for sealant conservation and level-gauging
US9498096B1 (en) * 2015-08-11 2016-11-22 Steven Lo Water-preserving urinal
US10077546B2 (en) 2016-03-31 2018-09-18 Mcaplpine & Co. Ltd. Cartridge for a urinal outlet
US10337179B2 (en) 2016-04-26 2019-07-02 Mcalpine & Co. Ltd. Flood prevention apparatus
CN111155613A (en) * 2020-01-21 2020-05-15 四川旅发环保科技有限公司 Oil seal toilet stool with oil-saving function

Families Citing this family (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2137247B (en) * 1983-03-30 1986-12-10 Nat Res Dev Waterless urinals; trap inlets
DE102011117750A1 (en) * 2011-11-05 2013-05-08 John Reese urinals

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Cited By (32)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4557274A (en) * 1982-06-07 1985-12-10 Cawood Charles David Midstream urine collector
US5331689A (en) * 1993-04-16 1994-07-26 Anwar Haq Portable urinal
US6959723B2 (en) * 1995-10-25 2005-11-01 Falvon Waterfree Technologies Oil sealant-preserving drain odor trap
US6425411B1 (en) * 1995-10-25 2002-07-30 Ditmar L. Gorges Oil sealant-preserving drain odor trap
US20030089397A1 (en) * 1995-10-25 2003-05-15 Gorges Ditmar L. Oil sealant-preserving drain odor trap
US5787517A (en) * 1997-04-28 1998-08-04 Shadikhan; Tajwar Standing urinal
US6467480B1 (en) * 1998-09-09 2002-10-22 Bernd Horst Meier Procedure and device for the movement and volume measurement of fluids and gases and device for the implementation of a respiration
US6053197A (en) * 1998-09-14 2000-04-25 Gorges; Ditmar L. Horizontal-flow oil-sealant-preserving drain odor trap
US6602464B1 (en) * 2000-04-14 2003-08-05 Gary L. Rapp Method and apparatus for treating digestible and odiferous waste
US20030198569A1 (en) * 2000-04-14 2003-10-23 Rapp Gary L. Method and apparatus for treating digestible and odiferous waste
US7335332B2 (en) 2000-04-14 2008-02-26 Rapp Gary L Method and apparatus for treating digestible and odiferous waste
US7246386B2 (en) * 2001-03-09 2007-07-24 Enviro-Fresh Limited Waste outlet assembly
US20040163171A1 (en) * 2001-03-09 2004-08-26 Hall Kelvin E. Waste outlet assembly
US6701541B2 (en) * 2001-04-06 2004-03-09 Geberit Technik Ag Odor trap for a waterless urinal
US7155760B2 (en) * 2002-04-22 2007-01-02 Mcalpine & Company Limited Waste trap
US20070079874A1 (en) * 2002-04-22 2007-04-12 Mcalpine & Company Limited Waste trap
US20040034925A1 (en) * 2002-04-22 2004-02-26 Mcalpine & Company Limited Waste trap
US20080118987A1 (en) * 2005-03-08 2008-05-22 Authentix, Inc. Microfluidic Device for Identification, Quantification, and Authentication of Latent Markers
US8354069B2 (en) 2005-03-08 2013-01-15 Authentix, Inc. Plug flow system for identification and authentication of markers
US20070074337A1 (en) * 2005-08-30 2007-04-05 Zurn Industries, Inc. Urinal
US7636957B2 (en) 2005-08-30 2009-12-29 Zurn Industries, Llc Urinal
US8234723B2 (en) 2006-10-13 2012-08-07 Sloan Valve Company Method and apparatus for delivering a urinal cleanser and trap sealant
US20080256695A1 (en) * 2006-10-13 2008-10-23 Allen James C Method and apparatus for delivering a urinal cleanser and trap sealant
EP2412879A1 (en) * 2010-07-28 2012-02-01 Andreas Bock Urinal and urinal siphon
US20120233753A1 (en) * 2011-03-16 2012-09-20 Andreas Baer Waterless Urinal Conversion Assembly
US8528121B2 (en) 2011-12-14 2013-09-10 Kohler Co. Urinal bracket
US9315980B2 (en) 2011-12-14 2016-04-19 Kohler Co. Urinal bracket
US8739320B1 (en) 2013-10-02 2014-06-03 Waterless Company, Inc. Waterless urinal odor trap with helical flow-path fins for sealant conservation and level-gauging
US9498096B1 (en) * 2015-08-11 2016-11-22 Steven Lo Water-preserving urinal
US10077546B2 (en) 2016-03-31 2018-09-18 Mcaplpine & Co. Ltd. Cartridge for a urinal outlet
US10337179B2 (en) 2016-04-26 2019-07-02 Mcalpine & Co. Ltd. Flood prevention apparatus
CN111155613A (en) * 2020-01-21 2020-05-15 四川旅发环保科技有限公司 Oil seal toilet stool with oil-saving function

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AU3986578A (en) 1980-03-20
AU522419B2 (en) 1982-06-03
GB1603579A (en) 1981-11-25

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